post is of three assignments
1: Heinz Dilemma
Order Description
This short paper assignment requires that you locate an individual to interview. The interview will take approximately 10?15 minutes to complete. The interview will be most effective in person, but if this is not possible the interview can take place over the phone, through email, or through any other appropriate means of technology. During the interview, you will present the interviewee with the Heinz dilemma, made famous by Kohlberg, and after a review of the dilemma, you will ask follow-up questions. You will review your interviewee?s responses and select which stage of moral development is indicated by the each of the responses. You will reflect on if you believe this is an accurate assessment of the individual?s level of moral development. Utilizing criticisms of Kohlberg?s model and this experience, you will construct a position on the utility of Kohlberg?s model for assessing moral development. Consider if Kohlberg?s theory accounts for atypical moral development (i.e., criminal behavior or aggressive actions).
2: Public Health and Informatics
Order Description
Assignment
Case analysis in which you will apply ethical decision making tools and/or concepts. The case is very short so you do not have a lot of facts to work with. Here is what you need to do:
1. Read the assigned readings and write up your answers to the case study questions below. Your finished product should be at least 600 words
2.Reference the assigned readings and any outside sources you use using APA style citation. We are looking for you to cite sources that add to the flavor of the discussion. Your unsubstantiated opinion will not suffice. Also, when giving examples, please try to provide examples other than what you found in the assigned readings.
Case Study and Discovery Questions
(This case comes from page 28 of the chapter you are assigned to read. Please answer the questions below.)
Case study
Mary Ruiz is the HIM manager for an HMO in Autotown, Indiana. In 1999, she noticed an unusually large number of recorded cases of neurologic damage to the bladders of patients who were seen by several of the group?s physicians. Mary alerted her supervisor, Mr. King, about the apparent increase in cases and proposed that she create a special database to track the occurrence of this condition. Mr. King told her not to waste her time.
Against her supervisor?s directives, Mary developed the database. Upon analyzing the data, Mary realized that all the affected patients worked in the same plant?a facility that manufactured automobile and truck seats. Alarmed by this discovery, Mary again approached her supervisor, this time with the suggestion that health authorities be notified of the increased incidence of this rare form of bladder disease. Again Mr. King rejected her suggestion. He reminded Mary that her primary responsibility was to provide data management services to the HMO healthcare team and to protect the confidentiality of patient records. He also reminded Mary that the manufacturing facility had the largest employee enrollment of any of the HMO?s clients and that the company was one of Autotown?s largest employers.
Case Study Discovery Questions
1. Assume that Mary lives in a state with a law similar to that of Colorado, which requires ?persons or employees having knowledge of exposure of large numbers or specific groups of persons to a known or suspected public health hazard [to] report such disease, outbreak or epidemic? (State of Colorado Rules and Regulations Pertaining to the Detection, Monitoring, and Investigation of Environmental and Chronic Diseases, 6 CCR-1009-7). Should Mary take it upon herself to notify the health authorities?
2. What if Mary?s state does not have that kind of law on the books? Does Mary have an ethical obligation to come forward with the evidence, even though she was told not to by her supervisor? Are there any actions that Mary can take to fulfill her conflicting obligations to the HMO?s patients, to her employer, to the automotive company, and to the public?
3. Does the HMO have an ethical duty to report the situation to governmental authorities?
Readings Attached Files:
Neuberger, B. J. and Swirsky, E. S. (2017). Public Health and Informatics. In L. B. Harman and F. H. Cornelius (Eds), Ethical Informatics: Challenges and Opportunities, 3rd ed. Boston: Jones and Bartlett.
What you have above is the redacted chapter. I removed sections on global issues, social media, and those containing appendicies since they were not relevant here.
governmental authorities